
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- BOOK II DELINEATION OF THE STATE OF SLAVERY IN OUR COLONIES, IN ITS ORDINARY PRACTICAL NATURE AND EFFECTS
- CHAPTER I REASONS FOR RESUMING THIS WORK; DEFENCE OF THE FIRST, AND PLAN OF THE SECOND VOLUME
- CHAPTER II OF AGRICULTURAL LABOUR IN THE TORRID ZONE, AND THE PERNICIOUS EFFECTS OF ITS EXCESS WHEN FORCIBLY EXACTED
- CHAPTER III THE HIGH PROBABILITY THAT THE AMOUNT OF FORCED LABOUR ON SUGAR PLANTATIONS IS OPPRESSIVELY AND DESTRUCTIVELY EXCESSIVE, DEDUCED FROM THE NATURAL TENDENCY OF THE SYSTEM; AND CONFIRMED BY THE DECLINE OF POPULATION AMONG THE PREDIAL SLAVES
- CHAPTER IV THE ACTUAL ORDINARY DETAILS AND GENERAL AMOUNT, IN POINT OF TIME, OF FORCED LABOUR ON SUGAR PLANTATIONS PARTICULARLY STATED AND PROVED; AND THE CRUEL EXCESS DEMONSTRATED
- CHAPTER V THE LABOUR SHEWN TO BE EXCESSIVE ALSO, FOR THE MOST PART, IN POINT OF INTENSITY, OR THE DEGREE OF ACTUAL EXERTION
- CHAPTER VI COMPARISON OF THE AMOUNT OF SLAVE LABOUR ON SUGAR PLANTATIONS WITH THAT OF AGRICULTURAL LABOURERS IN ENGLAND
- CHAPTER VII THE MEANS BY WHICH LABOUR IS ENFORCED ON SUGAR PLANTATIONS GREATLY AGGRAVATES ITS SEVERITY, AND ARE IN THEIR NATURE AND EFFECTS EXTREMELY CRUEL AND PERNICIOUS
- CHAPTER VIII THE MAINTENANCE OF THE PLANTATION SLAVES IS IN A VERY OPPRESSIVE AND CRUEL DEGREE PARSIMONIOUS AND INSUFFICIENT
- CHAPTER IX THE ALLOWANCES OF CLOTHING TO THE FIELD NEGROES BY THEIR OWNERS IS ALSO IN A SHAMEFUL DEGREE PENURIOUS AND INSUFFICIENT
- CHAPTER X THE SLAVES ARE VERY BADLY LODGED
- CHAPTER XI THE SLAVES ARE ALSO TREATED WITH GREAT HARSHNESS, NEGLECT, AND INHUMANITY WHEN SICK
- CHAPTER XII THE WHOLE EXPENSE OF THE MAINTENANCE OF PLANTATION SLAVES ESTIMATED AND COMPARED WITH THE COST OF FREE LABOUR
- CHAPTER XIII CONCLUDING AND PRACTICAL REFLECTIONS
- APPENDIX: CASES OF CRUELTY, INDICATING THE GENERAL PREVALENCE, IN THE SUGAR COLONIES, OF INSENSIBILITY TO THE SUFFERINGS OF SLAVES, AND AN INDISPOSITION TO RESTRAIN OR PUNISH THE AUTHORS OF SUCH OFFENCES
CHAPTER II - OF AGRICULTURAL LABOUR IN THE TORRID ZONE, AND THE PERNICIOUS EFFECTS OF ITS EXCESS WHEN FORCIBLY EXACTED
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- BOOK II DELINEATION OF THE STATE OF SLAVERY IN OUR COLONIES, IN ITS ORDINARY PRACTICAL NATURE AND EFFECTS
- CHAPTER I REASONS FOR RESUMING THIS WORK; DEFENCE OF THE FIRST, AND PLAN OF THE SECOND VOLUME
- CHAPTER II OF AGRICULTURAL LABOUR IN THE TORRID ZONE, AND THE PERNICIOUS EFFECTS OF ITS EXCESS WHEN FORCIBLY EXACTED
- CHAPTER III THE HIGH PROBABILITY THAT THE AMOUNT OF FORCED LABOUR ON SUGAR PLANTATIONS IS OPPRESSIVELY AND DESTRUCTIVELY EXCESSIVE, DEDUCED FROM THE NATURAL TENDENCY OF THE SYSTEM; AND CONFIRMED BY THE DECLINE OF POPULATION AMONG THE PREDIAL SLAVES
- CHAPTER IV THE ACTUAL ORDINARY DETAILS AND GENERAL AMOUNT, IN POINT OF TIME, OF FORCED LABOUR ON SUGAR PLANTATIONS PARTICULARLY STATED AND PROVED; AND THE CRUEL EXCESS DEMONSTRATED
- CHAPTER V THE LABOUR SHEWN TO BE EXCESSIVE ALSO, FOR THE MOST PART, IN POINT OF INTENSITY, OR THE DEGREE OF ACTUAL EXERTION
- CHAPTER VI COMPARISON OF THE AMOUNT OF SLAVE LABOUR ON SUGAR PLANTATIONS WITH THAT OF AGRICULTURAL LABOURERS IN ENGLAND
- CHAPTER VII THE MEANS BY WHICH LABOUR IS ENFORCED ON SUGAR PLANTATIONS GREATLY AGGRAVATES ITS SEVERITY, AND ARE IN THEIR NATURE AND EFFECTS EXTREMELY CRUEL AND PERNICIOUS
- CHAPTER VIII THE MAINTENANCE OF THE PLANTATION SLAVES IS IN A VERY OPPRESSIVE AND CRUEL DEGREE PARSIMONIOUS AND INSUFFICIENT
- CHAPTER IX THE ALLOWANCES OF CLOTHING TO THE FIELD NEGROES BY THEIR OWNERS IS ALSO IN A SHAMEFUL DEGREE PENURIOUS AND INSUFFICIENT
- CHAPTER X THE SLAVES ARE VERY BADLY LODGED
- CHAPTER XI THE SLAVES ARE ALSO TREATED WITH GREAT HARSHNESS, NEGLECT, AND INHUMANITY WHEN SICK
- CHAPTER XII THE WHOLE EXPENSE OF THE MAINTENANCE OF PLANTATION SLAVES ESTIMATED AND COMPARED WITH THE COST OF FREE LABOUR
- CHAPTER XIII CONCLUDING AND PRACTICAL REFLECTIONS
- APPENDIX: CASES OF CRUELTY, INDICATING THE GENERAL PREVALENCE, IN THE SUGAR COLONIES, OF INSENSIBILITY TO THE SUFFERINGS OF SLAVES, AND AN INDISPOSITION TO RESTRAIN OR PUNISH THE AUTHORS OF SUCH OFFENCES
Summary
The main object of slavery in the sugar colonies is the obtaining, by compulsion, the labour of negroes in the cultivation of the land.
It is maintained by the planters, that there are no other possible means by which West India produce can be raised; because Europeans, as they allege, cannot, and negroes, in a state of freedom, will not, till the soil in that climate. The former of these propositions was disputed by some early writers in the abolition controversy, who were not personally acquainted with the West Indies; and there are certainly some plausible grounds for denying that it is strictly and universally true; but it has never been controverted by me. Nor do I think that it can be fairly denied, to an extent material to the practical question for the sake of which it has been maintained; for Europeans certainly cannot work so much there in the tillage of the soil, without speedy destruction of health and life, as to make their labour in the raising of sugar a substitute that the planter can afford, while the black or coloured race, whether slaves or free, are their competitors.
On the first settlement of our oldest West Indian colonies, Europeans, I admit, were employed in the labours of the field; but they were chiefly transported convicts, or indented servants, who worked by compulsion; and at a time when sugar planting, incomparably the most laborious species of agriculture, was in its infancy, and was prosecuted to but a small extent.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Slavery of the British West India Colonies DelineatedAs it Exists Both in Law and Practice, and Compared with the Slavery of Other Countries, Antient and Modern, pp. 44 - 56Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1830